Paleowave

Last month, India faced what is purported to be the 5th deadliest heat wave on record for the planet, killing more than 2,300 people! Studies have shown that heat waves and temperature extremes in general will be exacerbated by global warming (see here, here, and here for example). Thus, it would be prudent to anticipate how bad these heat waves will get in the future.

Rainfall in the southeastern parts of India mainly derive from the retreating monsoon, peaking during October, while temperatures peak during May, typically when heat waves occur. Thus, summer monsoon rains cannot be depended upon to always alleviate May heat waves in southeastern India.

In June '97, a full year before the devastating heat wave, the southeastern coast of India was already anomalously warm (see below). May-June '98 was when the full brunt of the heat wave hit. With this being the case, and 2015 being analogous to 1997 June (prior to the Niño), are we to expect a worse heat wave next year?

May-June 1998, during the '97-98 El Niño event, was the deadliest heat wave to hit India

In any case, the annual temperature anomalies for the southeastern part of the Indian subcontinent do not look pretty:

Monthly anomalies (black) and annual anomalies (colors).

Considering trends in individual months, we see that the summer months of May to August are all warming anomalously, thereby exacerbating already-warm daily temperatures:

The summer months of May-August all seem to be warming anomalously, and will exacerbate already-warm daily temperatures.

Take-home message: The Indian heat wave we saw this May is certainly not the worst to come in the coming years. Action and measures to deal with the heat must be taken appropriately. I wouldn't be too surprised if next year brings a scorcher.